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Drinking Water

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Title: Drinking Water


1
Drinking Water Wastewater Regulation and
Treatment
2
Drinking Water Regulations
  • 1893 - Interstate Quarantine Act
  • Result Prohibition of Common Drinking Cup on
    Interstate Carriers created a market for Dixie
    cups
  • 1914 - Microbiological Standard
  • 2 coliforms / 100 ml
  • 1925 - New Microbiological Standard
  • 1 coliform / 100 ml
  • 1942 - Maximum Concentrations for Constituents
  • Lead Fluoride Arsenic
  • Selenium Barium Hexavalent Chromium
  • Copper Magnesium Iron Manganese
  • Zinc Chloride Sulfate
  • Phenolics Total Solids Alkalinity
  • Phenol carbolic acid, addition of methyl group
    forms cresols, o, m, or p

3
Drinking Water Regulations
  • 1962 Limits for
  • Alkyl benzene sulfonates (synthetic detergents)
  • Carbon-chloroform extract (organic residues)
  • Adsorption on activated carbon, chloroform
    extraction, gravity quantification
  • Barium Cadmium Cyanide
  • Nitrate Silver Radioactivity
  • Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974
  • Enacted over concern about organic materials in
    drinking water
  • Established Maximum Contaminant Levels (MCLs) for
    several substances Enforceable
  • Federal Guidelines - Secondary MCLs (SMCLs),
    Nonenforceable

4
1975 - National Interim Primary Drinking Water
Regulations
  • Amended repeatedly, now include
  • Microbiological Contaminants
  • Total and Fecal coliforms, E. coli, Turbidity
  • Radioactive Contaminants
  • Beta/photon emitters, Alpha emitters, Combined
    radium
  • Inorganic Contaminants
  • 15 elements or materials
  • Synthetic Organic Contaminants including
    Pesticides and Herbicides Volatile Organics
  • 54 compounds and groups of compounds

5
Drinking Water Treatment
6
Groundwater Treatment Options
7
Surface Water Treatment Options
8
Drinking Water Treatment Units or Processes
  • INTAKES
  • AERATION
  • COAGULATION FLOCCULATION
  • CLARIFICATION
  • FILTRATION
  • DISINFECTION
  • SOFTENING
  • TASTE ODOR CONTROL
  • IRON MANGANESE REMOVAL
  • TRACE METALS ORGANICS

9
AERATION(Usually for Groundwater)
  • ADDS OXYGEN
  • REMOVES
  • Carbon Dioxide Hydrogen Sulfide
  • Methane Taste Odors
  • REMOVAL MAY BE BY
  • Oxidation Volatilization
  • Iron Manganese Organics

10
Coagulation, Flocculation Clarification
  • Coagulation changes the electrical charge of
    suspended particles and colloids allows
    attachment to each other. Coagulants are usually
    cations Alum, Ferric Sulfate, Lime (CaO)
  • Chemical/Physical process of mixing special
    purpose chemical from flow and removing the
    resulting product
  • Silts/Clays, Viruses, Bacteria
  • Fulvic Humic Acids, Minerals, Organic
    Particulates
  • Flocculation is the agglomeration of particles
    into settleable particles
  • Clarification - sedimentation of floc particles,
    allows longer filter runs, settling velocity of
    the floc allows particle removal before the water
    leaves the basin

11
Drinking Water Filtration
  • Rapid Sand Filters are most commonly used for
    surface water
  • May be gravity or pressure flow
  • Some States prohibit pressure flow
  • Fine-to-course (back wash result)
  • Course-to-fine (multi-media)
  • Anthracite, Sand, Course Garnet, Fine Garnet
  • Rapid Sand filters may clean 1 - 2 gpm/ft2
  • Alternatives include microscreens, diatomaceous
    earth filters, cartridge filters

12
DISINFECTION
  • CT concept is the current basis for disinfection
    theory
  • CT K
  • C disinfectant concentration
  • T contact time
  • K proportionality constant, variable with
    different organisms
  • Ohio regulation 30 min contact time, 0.2 mg/l
    Cl2 residual
  • Chlorination is most common in the U.S.
  • Effective, low cost, proven technology
  • Reactions with natural aquatic organics produce
    trihalomethanes -- suspected carcinogens
  • Ozonation is popular in France, Germany, Canada,
    and Russia
  • Chlorine Dioxide gaining acceptance in Europe and
    U.S.

13
Chlorine Chemistry
  • Cl2 H2O -----gt H Cl- HOCl
  • HOCl Hypochlorous Acid, is the most active
    ingredient, concentration is pH dependent
    dissociates to H -OCl
  • Active against (listed in decreasing order)
  • Bacteria Viruses Protozoans (cysts)
  • Chlorine reacts with Ammonia (NH3) to produce
    mono, di, and trichloroamines
  • NH2Cl NHCl2 NCl3

14
Chlorine Residuals Chlorine Demand
  • Free Chlorine Cl2, HOCl, -OCl
  • Combined Chlorine Chloramines
  • Free Chlorine has strong disinfecting powers but
    is quickly dissipated
  • Combined Chlorine is slower acting but remains in
    solution longer and provides longer-term
    protection
  • Chlorine Demand the difference between the
    amount of chlorine applied and the amount of
    free, combined, or total chlorine remaining at
    the end of the contact period
  • Anything oxidizable can produce a chlorine
    demand, including pathogens, organics,
    particulates, sulfides, ammonia, etc.

15
Alternative Disinfectants
  • Ozone
  • O3, powerful oxidant, alternative to chlorine
  • Effective at low doses
  • Expensive (capital and operating costs)
  • Produces no residual
  • Chlorine Dioxide
  • ClO2, an unstable gas, produced at the point of
    use from sodium chlorite, NaClO2
  • Nearly as effective as chlorine, does not react
    with ammonia to produce chloramines, or with
    other organics to form trihalomethanes

16
BIOFILMS
  • In many environments, microorganisms form, and
    exist in, complex, protective layers called
    biofilms
  • Biofilms may form in any part of a drinking water
    distribution system. Cooling towers can support
    robust biofilms.
  • Disinfectants may be unable to attack or
    completely remove the organisms in biofilms
  • Most biofilms are made up of non-pathogenic
    organisms however, pathogens may be protected in
    such an environment

17
Softening
  • Reduction in dissolved calcium and magnesium
    reduces deposits in distribution system - scale
    formation (CaCO3)
  • Hard water reacts with soap to form films that
    are difficult to remove
  • Hard water deposits form scale in boilers
  • Softening also removes some trace inorganics
    Pb, Cd, Ag, Ba, Cr, As, Hg, and Ra
  • Lime-soda process adds quick lime (CaO) or
    hydrated lime Ca(OH)2, precipitating calcium
    carbonate (CaCO3)
  • Ion-exchange removes Ca2 and Mg2 and replaces
    them with Na ions often used in homes

18
Taste Odor Control
  • Very low concentrations of metals, salts, or
    organics may produce detectable levels in
    sensitive people - iron, copper, manganese, and
    zinc, magnesium chloride and bicarbonate,
    chlorinated organics fungal and algal
    metabolites hydrogen sulfide, other sulfur
    compounds
  • Activated carbon is often very effective in
    removing organics
  • Oxidation (chlorine, chlorine dioxide, ozone)

19
  • Iron Manganese Removal
  • Iron and manganese cause staining and leave
    noticeable residuals at very low concentrations
  • Fe gt0.2 mg/l Mn gt0.1 mg/l
  • Iron promotes growth of iron bacteria in mains
    that increase friction and power consumption
  • Oxidation produces less soluble compounds and
    precipitation is often used for removal
  • Trace Metals
  • Iron, Cadmium, Lead, Copper, Zinc may come from
    the plumbing system others may be from the
    aquifer
  • Corrosion control processes may be the most
    effective means of reducing these concentrations
    - precipitation of a layer of calcium carbonate
    often provides a nonreactive surface

20
  • Turbidity
  • A measure of suspended particulates in water -
    clays, microorganisms, organics
  • Highly turbid waters are difficult to disinfect
    because of high demands - large amounts of
    materials to be oxidized organisms protected
    from exposure to disinfectants
  • Coagulation and flocculation, and filtration are
    common removal methods
  • Trace Organics
  • Solvents, hydrocarbons, etc. may come from the
    aquifer
  • Modified organics may be the result of
    disinfection processes
  • Humic and fulvic acids are poorly defined and are
    common in natural waters
  • TOC and TOX are broad tests of water quality
  • Precipitation, filtration, adsorption, and
    oxidation may all remove some of the materials

21
Fluoridation
  • The fluoridation process was very controversial
    when initially implemented
  • Low concentrations (1 - 2 mg/l) of fluoride
    provide strong protection against tooth decay
  • Slightly higher concentrations (gt 4 mg/l) can
    cause discoloring of teeth

22
  • CROSS CONNECTIONS
  • Accidental contamination of drinking water can
    occur during routine plumbing modification, sewer
    backups, floods, earthquakes, careless
    homeowners, etc.
  • FOAMING AGENTS
  • Surfactants (the active part of detergents) can
    get into surface water through incomplete sewage
    treatment
  • Groundwater sources include septic tank systems

23
Nitrate Nitrite
  • Nitrate is common in natural waters at 1 to 2
    mg/l
  • Nitrate (NO3) is reduced to nitrite (NO2) in the
    digestive system - reduction is more complete in
    infants than adults - because of more alkaline
    conditions in system
  • Excess nitrite produces methemoglobinemia in
    infants by oxidizing hemoglobin to methemoglobin
    which cannot carry oxygen
  • Nitrosamines formation (suspected carcinogens)
    can also occur from nitrate or nitrite

24
  • TOTAL DISSOLVED SOLIDS
  • High TDS may increase corrosivity because of
    increase conductance
  • High sodium may be of health concern
  • CORROSIVITY
  • Decreases life of plumbing system
  • Solubilized metals, perhaps in toxic quantities -
    lead and cadmium are of most concern
  • Copper, iron, and zinc produce tastes and stains
  • Corrosion can shield microorganisms from
    disinfection processes
  • Water may be characterized as passive or
    aggressive

25
CLEAN WATER ACT - Background
  • Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899
  • Prohibited discharge of refuse without a permit
    from the Secretary of the Army
  • Water Pollution Control Act of 1948
  • Gave primary responsibilities to the States
  • Provided construction funds, Money never
    appropriated
  • Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1956
  • Authorized Grants for construction
  • Provided funds for research into Health Effects
  • Other minor Acts in 1961, 1965, 1966, 1970

26
  • Federal Water Pollution Control Act - 1972 - PL
    92-500
  • Goal of fishable/swimmable water
  • Construction Grants for Sewage Treatment
    Facilities
  • BPT - Best Practicable Treatment
  • BAT - Best Available Treatment
  • Concentrated on Oxygen Demand, Suspended Solids
  • 1976 - NRDC v. Train - Consent Decree - resulted
    in...
  • Clean Water Act - 1977 - PL 95-217
  • Wetlands Resources Act - 1986
  • Water Quality Act Amendments of 1987
  • Required EPA regulations on storm water runoff
  • Required State nonpoint source management programs

27
TITLE I -RESEARCH AND RELATED PROGRAMS
  • Sec. 101 - Declaration of Goals and Policy --
    Objective Restore and maintain the chemical,
    physical, and biological integrity of the
    Nation's waters.
  • Goals
  • 1. Eliminate pollutant discharges into navigable
    waters by 1985.
  • 2. Interim goal to protect fish, shellfish, and
    wildlife and provide for recreation in and on the
    water by July 1, 1983.
  • 3. Prohibit the discharge of toxic pollutants in
    toxic amounts.

28
TITLE III - STANDARDS AND ENFORCEMENT
  • 304 - Information and Guidelines - provides for
    development of water quality criteria. Defines
    conventional pollutants - including, but not
    limited to, biological oxygen demand, suspended
    solids, fecal coliforms, and pH, --- specifically
    excluded thermal.
  • 305 - Water Quality Inventory - requires States
    to provide a water quality description, an
    inventory of point-source dischargers, and an
    estimate of costs of improving quality.
  • 306 - National Standards of Performance -
    requires a list of categories of sources and
    establishment of new source performance standards
    for those categories

29
TITLE IV PERMITS AND LICENSES
  • Sec 402 - National Pollutant Discharge
    Elimination System - (NPDES) establishes
    requirements for issuing permits and State
    implementation of the program.
  • Excludes Irrigation return flows, Storm water
    runoff from Oil, Gas and Mining operations
  • Anti-Backsliding - renewed permits must be as
    stringent as the original
  • Storm water is included by October 1, 1993

30
ADDITIONS, AMENDMENTS
  • LIMITATIONS ON DISCHARGE OF RAW SEWAGE BY NEW
    YORK CITY
  • North River Plant - required to have advanced
    preliminary treatment by Aug, 1986
  • Red Hook Plant - required advanced preliminary
    treatment by Aug, 1987
  • BOSTON HARBOR AND ADJACENT WATERS
  • Authorization for constructing waste treatment
    works for providing secondary treatment

31
Oil Pollution Act
  • Revised penalties for oil discharges
  • Administrative penalties of 125,000 for
    violations of regulations or discharges
  • Civil penalties of 25,000/ day for discharges,
    or 1,000/ barrel of oil
  • Gross negligence or misconduct minimum penalty of
    100,000

32
CONVENTIONAL POLLUTANTS
  • Several are Empirical, derived by
    experimentation
  • Biological Oxygen Demand - test using
    microorganisms that measures oxygen uptake over
    five days
  • Suspended Solids - quantified by filtration of a
    sample and drying and weighing the filter
  • Fecal Coliform Bacteria - microbial analysis
    dependent upon incubation conditions and
    selective media
  • pH - measured directly
  • Oil and Grease - derived by extraction of a water
    sample with a solvent and either an infra-red
    (IR) measure of the solvent, or a gravimetric
    measure of the residue

33
Pretreatment Regulations
  • Industrial discharges into POTWs (40 CFR 403)
  • POTWs with flows gt 5 million gpd, or smaller
    POTWs with significant industrial discharges must
    establish local pretreatment programs
  • National standards must be enforced
  • Hazardous wastes are the focus of regulation
  • Significant industrial users must meet reporting
    requirements
  • Users subject to categorical pretreatment
    standards
  • Users of gt 25,000 gpd of processed wastewater
  • Users that make up gt5 average organic capacity
  • Other users with a reasonable potential to
    adversely effect the POTWs operation

34
Wastewater Treatment
  • Collection System
  • Sewage
  • Domestic (sanitary)
  • Industrial
  • Mixed
  • Stormwater
  • Separate Systems
  • Combined Systems
  • Infiltration (20 to 3,000 gal/acre/day)

35
Unit Operations Unit Processes
  • Unit Operations - Treatment methods using
    physical forces
  • Screening Mixing Flocculation
  • Sedimentation Flotation Filtration
  • Aeration (gas transfer)
  • Unit Processes - Treatment methods using chemical
    or biological reactions
  • Precipitation Adsorption Disinfection
  • Biodegradation Nutrient Removal

36
Treatment Levels
  • Primary Treatment - (preliminary), physical unit
    operations
  • Removal of constituents that cause maintenance or
    operational problems -- debris, grit, oil and
    grease,
  • Secondary Treatment - chemical and biological
    unit processes
  • Removal of biodegradable organics and suspended
    solids
  • Tertiary Treatment - (advanced), combinations of
    all three methods
  • Removal of residual nutrients, toxics, specific
    contaminants

37
Typical Treatment Process
  • Bar Grit
  • Influent Screen Chamber Primary
  • Clarifier
  • Anaerobic Activated
  • Digester Sludge Unit(s)
  • Disinfection Secondary
  • Clarifier
  • Effluent

Sludge Disposal
Sludge Return
38
Industrial WastewaterTreatment - Differences
  • Equalization - hydraulic residence time at least
    equal to activated sludge unit, may be several
    times longer
  • Oil Separation
  • Dissolved Air Flotation, Dissolved Gas Flotation
  • Corrugated Plate Interceptors
  • Sludges may be hazardous by regulation

39
Design Criteria
  • Flow Rate
  • Peak Hour Maximum Day
  • Maximum Month Minimum Hour
  • Minimum Day Minimum Month
  • Mass Loading
  • Maximum Day Sustained Peaks
  • Maximum Month Minimum Month
  • Minimum Day

40
WastewaterDaily Flow Pattern
  • Midnight Noon Midnight

41
Reactor Types
  • Homogeneous Reactions
  • Batch Reactor
  • Plug-Flow Reactor
  • Complete-Mix Reactor, Stirred Tank Reactor
  • Complete-Mix Reactors in Series -
  • May be significantly more effective than the same
    volume in a single unit
  • Arbitrary -Flow Reactor
  • Heterogeneous Reactions
  • Packed-Bed Reactor
  • Fluidized-Bed Reactor

42
Mass-Balance Analysis
  • Accumulation Inflow - Outflow Generation
  • V dC/dt QCo - QC V(-kC)
  • V volume of reactor
  • dC/dt rate of change of reactant concentration
    within reactor
  • Q volumetric flow rate into/out of reactor
  • Co reactant concentration in influent
  • C reactant concentration in reactor and
    effluent
  • k first-order reaction-rate constant
  • Mass Balance Applications
  • Model constituent biodegradation or removal
    (volatilization, precipitation, etc.)
  • Model solids (sludge) formation

43
Common Operational and Design Practices
  • Gravity flow through system
  • Only pump the water one time
  • Parallel units
  • Allow operational flexibility and maintenance
  • Minimize human contact with materials

44
SIMPLIFIED TREATMENT FLOWFairborn Plant
  • Raw
  • Sewage

Grit Tanks
Oxidation Ditches
Digesters
Landfill
Sludge Return
Disinfection
Clarifiers
Effluent to Mad River
45
Fairborn NPDES Permit Requirements
  • Sampling Stations
  • Plant Outfall
  • Waste Sludge
  • Raw Sewage Influent
  • Upstream at State Route 235
  • Downstream - 200 ft south of lift station at
    River Mile 8.6
  • Samples
  • Composite samples of at least three grab samples
    proportionate in volume to the sewage flow rate
    at the time of sampling...intervals of at least
    30 min., but not more than 2 hours

46
FairbornPerformance Statistics
  • Average Daily Flow (mgd) 3.795
  • Average Influent
  • Suspended Solids 198 mg/l
  • BOD 143 mg/l
  • Ammonia 16 mg/l
  • Average Effluent
  • Suspended Solids 6 mg/l 97
  • BOD 3 mg/l 98
  • Ammonia 0.1 mg/l 99
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